White House sees YouTube, Facebook as 'Judge, Jury & Executioner' on
vaccine misinformation
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[July 23, 2021] By
Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House has
YouTube, not just Facebook, on its list of social media platforms
officials say are responsible for an alarming spread of misinformation
about COVID vaccines and are not doing enough to stop it, sources
familiar with the administration's thinking said.
The criticism comes just a week after President Joe Biden called
Facebook and other social media companies "killers" for failing to slow
the spread of misinformation about vaccines. He has since softened his
tone. https://reut.rs/3kP3lD4
A senior administration official said one of the key problems is
"inconsistent enforcement." YouTube - a unit of Alphabet Inc's Google -
and Facebook get to decide what qualifies as misinformation on their
platforms. But the results have left the White House unhappy.
"Facebook and YouTube... are the judge, the jury and the executioner
when it comes to what is going on in their platforms," an administration
official said, describing their approach to COVID misinformation. "They
get to grade their own homework."
Some of the main pieces of vaccine misinformation the Biden
administration is fighting include that the COVID-19 vaccines are
ineffective, false claims that they carry microchips and that they hurt
women's fertility, the official said.
Social media companies have come under fire recently from Biden, his
press secretary, Jen Psaki, and Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, who have
all said the spread of lies about vaccines is making it harder to fight
the pandemic and save lives.
A recent report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH),
which has also been highlighted by the White House, showed 12
anti-vaccine accounts are spreading nearly two-thirds of anti-vaccine
misinformation online. Six of those accounts are still posting on
YouTube.
https://www.counterhate.com/
disinfosequel
"We would like to see more done by everybody" to limit the spread of
inaccurate information from those accounts, the official said.
The fight against vaccine misinformation has become a top priority for
the Biden administration at a time when the pace of vaccinations has
slowed considerably despite the risk posed by the Delta variant, with
people in many parts of the country hostile to being vaccinated.
The requests to Facebook and YouTube come after the White House reached
out to Facebook, Twitter and Google in February about clamping down on
COVID misinformation, seeking their help to stop it from going viral,
another senior administration official said then.
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Facebook logo is
reflected in a drop on a syringe needle in this illustration photo
taken March 16, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"Facebook is the 800-pound gorilla in the room when it comes to vaccine
misinformation... but Google has a lot to answer for and somehow manages to get
away with it always because people forget they own YouTube," said Imran Ahmed,
CCDH founder and chief executive.
YouTube spokeswoman Elena Hernandez said that since March 2020, the company has
removed over 900,000 videos containing COVID-19 misinformation and terminated
YouTube channels of people identified in the CCDH report. She said the company's
policies are based on the content of the video, rather than the speaker.
"If any remaining channels mentioned in the report violate our policies, we will
take action, including permanent terminations," she said.
On Monday, YouTube also said it will add more credible health information and as
well as tabs for viewers to click on.
The senior administration official cited four issues on which the administration
has asked Facebook to provide specific data, but the company has been reticent
to comply.
These include how much vaccine misinformation exists on its platform, who is
seeing the inaccurate claims, what the company is doing to reach out to them and
how does Facebook know the steps it is taking are working.
The official said the answers Facebook has given are not "good enough." Facebook
spokesman Kevin McAlister said the company has removed over 18 million pieces of
COVID-19 misinformation since the start of the pandemic and that its own data
shows that for people in the United States using the platform, vaccine hesitancy
has declined by 50% since January and vaccine acceptance is high.
In a separate blog post last Saturday, Facebook called on the administration to
stop "finger-pointing," laying out the steps it had taken to encourage users to
get vaccinated.
But the administration official said the blog post did not have any metrics of
success. The Biden administration's broad concern is that the platforms are
"either lying to us and hiding the ball, or they're not taking it seriously and
there isn't a deep analysis of what's going on in their platforms," the official
said. "That calls any solutions they have into question."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose; Editing by Chris Sanders and Dan Grebler)
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